Moody’s slashes Spain’s credit rating

Moody’s Investor Service downgraded the Spanish government’s credit rating on Wednesday by three notches, from A3 to Baa3, just above junk status, as a direct result of the country’s eurozone rescue package over the weekend.

AP - Moody’s Investor Service cut the Spanish government’s credit rating, a direct result of the rescue package lined up by European leaders over the weekend.

The rating lowered Spain’s rating from A3 to Baa3, which leaves it in investment-grade status but just one notch above junk.

The downgrade Wednesday comes after European leaders announced a €100 billion ($125.64 billion) loan to Spain on Sunday. The loan is meant to help Spain shore up its hobbled banking system. But it will also increase the government’s debt burden, according to Moody’s.

That higher debt burden has pushed Spain’s borrowing costs to record highs this week.

Moody’s said it put Spain on review for another possible downgrade in the coming months.

The rating agency gave the same downgrade to the country’s fund for bank restructuring, known as Spain’s “Fondo de Reestructuración Ordenada Bancaria”, which was created in 2009 to oversee mergers of banks to help strengthen the country’s banking system.

Moody’s said the fund’s debt got the same rating because it is fully and unconditionally guaranteed by the government.

“While the details of the support package have yet to be announced, it is clear that the responsibility for supporting Spanish banks rests with the Spanish government,” Moody’s said in a note.

The agency expects Spain’s public debt ratio will rise to around 90 percent of its gross domestic product this year and continue to increase until the middle of the decade.

Moody’s and other rating agencies have lowered their ratings on a number of European governments and financial institutions recently, given the economic turmoil in region

The rating agency also downgraded the bond rating of Cyprus’s government Wednesday by two notches to Ba3 from Ba1, sinking it further into junk-grade status on the increasing likelihood that Greece will exit the euro.

Cyprus has heavy exposure to Greek banks and Greece’s exit from the euro would increase the amount of support that Cypress would have to extend to its banks at a time when the country’s finances are already strained and it has little access to international markets.